Title: The Dark Side of the Universe
1The Dark Side of the Universe
Katherine Freese Michigan Center for Theoretical
Physics University of Michigan
2 BIG BANG
14 BILLION YEARS AGO
Hot primordial soup Universe is
Cooling and Expanding
3QUARK/HADRON TRANSITION
t 0.01 sec
4Galaxy formation t 1 million years
5Raisin Bread Model of the Universe
- As the loaf rises, raisins move steadily apart
from one another, with the loaf maintaining the
same configuration.
6Cosmological Principles
- Universe is homogeneous
- looks the same at every point
- (on average)
- Universe is isotropic
- looks the same in every direction
7The Great Wall
8Homogeneous Universe
9- At the turn of the Millenium, recent experiments
answered some of the BIG QUESTIONS - What is the geometry of the universe?
- What is the mass of the observable universe?
- How big is the universe?
- BUT many questions remain what is the universe
made of?
10Geometry of the Universe
1930 Three possible geometries for the
universe 2000 The geometry of the universe is
FLAT!!!!!!
11Universe has Flat Geometry
- Universe is NOT two-dimensional.
- Goes out to infinity in all three directions
-
- Shortest distance between two
- points is a straight line.
- No curvature required,
- no weird geometry.
12Geometry is Determined by Matter Content
13Matter Bends Light
14Objects appear to be in different positions
15As we look backwards in time
- All points in infinite universe getting closer
and closer - --- yet universe can still be infinite all
the - way back!
- Eventually, the density at each point is so great
we lose description (maybe string theory?) - Big Bang at every point in the universe.
16Big Bang happens everywhere at once (not at a
single point)
17Dark Matter in Galaxies
- What do galaxies look like?
- Rotation Curves and galactic dark matter
- Evidence for dark matter in clusters of galaxies
- What can the Dark Matter be?
18Our Galaxy The Milky Way
The mass of the galaxy
solar masses
19Galaxies
20Scematic of typical galaxy
21Galaxies have Dark Matter Haloes
22Rotation Curves
- How do we know that galaxies have dark matter
haloes? Rotation Curves. - Example Solar System Rotation Curve
- 95 of the mass of galaxies is made of an unknown
component!!!
23Solar System Rotation Curve
Average Speeds of the Planets
As you move out from the Sun, speeds of the
planets drop.
24Solar System
25Tyco Brahe(1546-1601)
Lost his nose in a duel, and wore a gold and
silver replacement. Studied planetary
orbits. Died of a burst bladder at a dinner
with the king.
26Rotation Curves of Galaxies
Orbit of a star in a Galaxy speed is Determined
by Mass
27Speed is determined by Mass
The speed at distance r from the center of the
galaxy is determined by the mass interior to
that radius. Larger mass causes faster orbits.
28Vera Rubin
Studied rotation curves of galaxies, and found
that they are FLAT!
2995 of the matter in galaxies is unknown dark
matter!
- Rotation Curves of Galaxies
OBSERVED FLAT ROTATION CURVE
EXPECTED FROM STARS
30Suns orbit is sped up by dark matter in the
Milky Way
31Dark Matter in Clusters of Galaxies
- Rotation Curves of Galaxies in the Cluster
- Lensing
- Gravitationally Confined Hot Gas in Clusters
32Lensing Another way to detect dark matter it
makes light bend
33Lensing by dark matter
34Dark Matter in a Rich Cluster
35Hubble Space Telescope
36Hot Gas in Clusters The Coma Cluster
Without dark matter, the hot gas would evaporate.
X-ray Image from the ROSAT satellite
Optical Image
37The Dark Matter Problem
- 95 of the mass in galaxies and clusters
- of galaxies are made of an unknown dark matter
component - Known from rotation curves,
- gravitational lensing,
- hot gas in clusters.
38Formation of Structure Numerical Simulations
Dark Matter particles come together to make
galaxies, clusters, and larger scale structures
39(No Transcript)
40(No Transcript)
41(No Transcript)
42(No Transcript)
43(No Transcript)
44The Dark Matter is NOT
- Diffuse Hot Gas (would produce x-rays)
- Cool Neutral Hydrogen (see in quasar absorption
lines) - Small lumps or snowballs of hydrogen (would
evaporate) - Rocks or Dust (high metallicity)
- (Hegyi and
Olive)
45What Can the Dark Matter Be?
- MACHOs Massive Compact Halo Objects
- made of ordinary matter
- OR
- WIMPs Weakly Interacting Massive Particles made
of exotic matter
46MACHOs
- Faint stars
- Planetary Objects (Brown Dwarfs)
- Stellar Remnants
- White Dwarfs
- Neutron Stars
- Black Holes
47Is Dark Matter Made of Stars? NO!
- Faint Stars Hubble Space Telescope
- Planetary Objects
- parallax data
- microlensing experiments
- Together, these objects make up less than 3 of
the mass of the Milky Way.
48Microlensing experiments
49Microlensing Event
Only three percent of the Halo can be made of
faint stars or brown dwarfs.
50Stellar Evolution
- Currently, the Sun is undergoing fusion
- 4 Hydrogen burning to Helium
51Stellar Remnants
- Three possible outcomes
- White Dwarf Once the Sun runs out of nuclear
fuel, it will collapse to a white dwarf - (electron degeneracy pressure)
- Neutron Star Stars three times as heavy as the
Sun collapse to neutron stars - (neutron degeneracy pressure)
- Black Hole Stars twenty times as heavy as the
Sun collapse to black holes. - These three dark matter candidates are all about
as massive as our Sun.
52Black Hole Structure
The gravity of the black hole is so strong that
anything entering inside the event horizon
can never escape, not even light!
53Artists Impression of a Black Hole
54Black Hole at Center of Galaxy
At the center of every galaxy is a very massive
black hole, as massive as a million suns.
These massive black holes form from mergers and
are NOT the dark matter.
55Is Dark Matter made of Stellar Remnants? NO
- Their progenitors overproduce infrared radiation.
- Their progenitors overproduce element abundances
(C, N, He) - Enormous mass budget.
- Requires extreme properties to make them.
- NONE of the expected signatures of a stellar
remnant population is found.
At most 20 of the dark matter can be white
dwarfs, neutron stars, or remnant blackholes.
56I HATE MACHOS!
- DESPERATELY LOOKING FOR WIMPS!
57WIMPs
- Weakly Interacting Massive Particles
- About 100 times as heavy as protons
- Go right through us
- The Death Theory one interacts in a human
roughly every 70 years - Motivated by supersymmetry from particle theory
58Supersymmetry
- Particle theory designed to keep particle masses
at the right values - Every particle we know has a partner
- photon photino
- quark squark
- electron selectron
- The lightest supersymmetric partner is a dark
matter candidate.
59WIMP dark matter halo
60WIMPs
61Detection of WIMP dark matter
62Our Universe is Accelerating
Observations of Type IA Supernovae suggest that
the Universe is accelerating.
- Possible explanations
- I. Dark Energy
- Cosmological constant
- Decaying vacuum energy (Freese, Adams, Frieman,
and Mottola 1987 - Quintessence (Ratra and Peebles, Steinhardt,
Wang, et al.) - II. Modification to the Einstein Equations
63(No Transcript)
64Alternative modify the Friedmann equation
- We propose a modification to the Friedmann
equations governing the expansion of the universe.
Usual Friedmann equation
65The Cardassian Alternative
- We propose a modification to the Friedmann
equations governing the expansion of the universe.
No vacuum, No curvature
Matter and radiation only
Simplest version
(K. Freese and M. Lewis, PLB 540 (2002) p1.)
66Power Law Cardassian
- Geometry is flat, as required by the CMB no
curvature term. - NO VACUUM TERM
- MATTER ONLY
- The new term is initially negligible.
- Nucleosynthesis is unaffected by its presence.
- The Cardassian term begins to dominate recently,
at z zcard O(1), as indicated by SN
observations. - This fixes B and essentially corresponds to the
coincidence problem. - Once the new term dominates, the universe expands
according to
67The Critical Energy Density of the Universe
- The geometry of the Universe is flat. What
energy density does this correspond to? - Today,
- The energy density that satisfies this equation
is, by definition, the critical density. Hence,
the critical density is now a different number, - The Universe can be flat and matter dominated,
with a matter density that is 0.3 of the old
critical density.
68Ratio of new to old critical density.
69Cluster Baryon Fraction Estimates
- Numerical simulations suggest that clusters are
representative of the universe (Evrard, et al.,
2001). - Measurement of the cluster baryon fraction,
coupled with observed light element densities
from big bang nucleosynthesis can be used to
estimate the overall matter density in the
universe
- Taken at face value, assuming Ob 0.024,
measurements of the cluster baryon fraction
indicate that the matter density in the universe
is (White, et al., 1993)
70- The Universe can be flat, matter dominated, and
accelerating, with a matter density that is 0.3
of the old critical density.
Matter can provide the entire closure density of
the Universe.
71Equivalent Formulation of Power Law Cardassian
- Equivalently, power law Cardassian can be written
in the form
For reasonable parameters, Modifications are
only important for Hence, solar system physics
is completely unaffected.
72Generalized Cardassian
- More generally, we consider modifications to the
Friedman equation, - The function returns to the usual
early on, but takes a different
form that drives acceleration after z1. For
example,
(Modified Polytropic Cardassian)
73Cardassian vs. Quintessence
- What is the difference between the Cardassian and
quintessence models? - Quintessence requires a dark energy component
with a specific equation of state (
). - The only ingredients in Cardassian cosmology are
ordinary matter and radiation. - As far as observations of a(t) are concerned,
there is a correspondence between power law
Cardassian and quintessence models. - However, Poissons eqns., cluster abundances,
ISW will be different for the two models. - Generalized Cardassian models can be
distinguished from generic quintessence models
with upcoming precision cosmological experiments.
74Best Fit Values for Power Law Cardassian
Parameters
- Current estimates of the dark energy equation
of state parameter imply,
WMAP constraints (Bennett, et al., 2003)
- Requiring now gives an estimate
for zcard, the redshift at which the new term
begins to dominate
75The Age of the Universe
- In the Cardassian model, the age of the universe
is typically modified. An accelerating universe
is generally older than one not accelerating.
- Here we assume
- Current measurements suggest
WMAP (Bennett, et al., 2003)
76The Position of the Doppler Peak in the CMB
- The accelerated expansion of the universe will
shift the position of the first peak in the CMB.
In a flat geometry, the angular size subtended by
the sound horizon at the time of recombination is
given by,
77Comparison of Generalized Cardassian Models with
Current Supernova Data
(Wang, Freese, Gondolo, and Lewis,
astro-ph/0302064)
78Determining the Sign of
79Estimating Dark Energy Density From Supernova
Data (SNAP)
80Additional Observational Tests
- Using CMBFast to further constrain Cardassian
parameters in light of WMAP data. - ISW effect may differentiate Cardassian from
generic quintessence models. - Number count tests
- DEEP2 (Marc Davis)
- Abundance of galaxy halos of fixed rotational
speed Depend on the comoving volume element - Alcock-Paczynski Test
- Compares angular size of a spherical object at
redshift z to its redshift extent . - Trick use correlation function of Lyman-alpha
clouds as spherical objects (Crotts, Hui)
81Motivation for Cardassian Models
- 1) Modified Friedmann equations arise generically
in theories with extra dimensions (Chung and
Freese 1999). - 2) Fluid description. Ordinary Friedmann
equation, but energy density has additional terms
(possibly due to dark matter with
self-interactions characterized by negative
pressure).
82(No Transcript)
83Motivation for Cardassian Cosmology 1) Extra
Dimensions
- In a 5-dimensional universe with a metric,
where u is the coordinate in the direction of
the 5th dimension, one does not generically
obtain the usual FRW equation on the observable
brane (Chung and Freese, 1999).
- By suitable choice of the bulk energy momentum
tensor, one may obtain an FRW equation on our
brane of the form, -
- for any n. More generally, one can obtain
other modifications.
84Motivation for the Cardassian Term
- This result arises from the 5D Einstein
equations together with the Israel boundary
conditions relating energy-momentum on our brane
to derivatives of the metric in the bulk. - We stress that there is no unique 5D energy
momentum tensor that gives rise to a Cardassian
term. However, as an existence proof, we have
constructed an inelegant example,
where,
85Cardassian Fine-tuning
- The power law Cardassian term begins to dominate
when,
- The parameter B must be chosen by hand. This
essentially corresponds to the coincidence
problem. - The size of B is set by the extra-dimensions, and
clues to its value may come from understanding
better the extra-dimensional physics. - The mass scale corresponding to B is very small
for nlt1/2, singular for n1/2, and becomes large
for ngt1/2. For the good fit Cardassian
parameters, n0.2
- These values for B correspond to an energy
density in the bulk of
- The value is unmotivated, but not unreasonable.
- We stress again that the form of the bulk energy
momentum is not unique!
86Motivation for Cardassian Cosmology 2) Fluid
Description
- We use the ordinary Friedmann equation,
- And take the energy density to be the sum of two
terms
(Gondolo and Freese, hep-ph/0209322,
hep-ph/0211397)
87Conservation Laws
- Energy Conservation
- Modified Continuity equation
- Modified Eulers equation
- Particle Number Conservation
- Modified Poissons Equation
- Newtonian limit
88Example Fluid Description of Power Law Cardassian
Problem on Galactic Scales
New force destroys flat rotation curves. Hence,
fluid power law Cardassian must be thought of as
an effective model which applies only on large
scales.
89Example Fluid Description of MP Cardassian
- Parameter n important on large scales.
- Parameter q important on small scales rotation
curves are fine. - We are checking the power spectrum.
90Weak Energy Condition
- Some Cardassian models can satisfy the weak
energy condition even
with a dark energy component - (matches data?)
- Example MP Cardassian
91Speculation Self Interacting Dark Matter?
- Dark matter may be subject to a new, long range,
confining force (fifth force?) - n.b. Analogous to quark confinement that exhibits
negative pressure. - Thermodynamic arguments determine the equation of
state of the force mediators,
92Summary
- We have proposed a modification to the
conventional FRW equations that allows for a
flat, accelerating universe that contains only
matter. - The critical density of the universe has
decreased so that ordinary matter may now result
in a flat geometry. - Cardassian models are consistent with both CMB
and supernovae observations. Future data may
distinguish between models. - Nucleosynthesis, as well as structure formation
prior to zcard is unaffected. - The modification may result from the presence of
extra dimensions. - A fluid description has been developed, possibly
due to self interacting dark matter. - From a theoretical perspective it may be
profitable to consider alternatives to
conventional dark energy scenarios. - Future directions
- A fundamental theory? Can we write down a
Lagrangian? - Detailed analysis of structure formation in the
context of the model.
93Etymology
- Cardassians are an alien race indigenous to the
Star Trek universe. - They appear foreign to us, yet consist entirely
of matter. - They are bent on the accelerated expansion of
their empire.
94Cardassian vs. Quintessence
- Can the Cardassian and quintessence models be
distinguished? - The models are fundamentally different.
- Cardassian modification of the Einstein equations
will also result in a modification of the Poisson
equation. Precision observations of cluster
abundances, etc., may therefore serve to
distinguish one model from the other. - Late ISW effect might be different in the context
of Cardassian model.
95The Cardassian Alternative
- We propose a modification to the
Friedmann-Robertson-Walker (FRW) equations
governing the expansion of the universe.
96Features of Cardassian Model
- The model contains only matter (i.e. no vacuum
contribution) - Geometry in the model is flat (as required by CMB
measurements).
97The Critical Density of the Universe
- What energy density corresponds to a flat
universe in our model? If the second term starts
to dominate at a red-shift zeq, - We find that the critical density has been
modified from its usual value. In the Cardassian
model, the new critical density is,
98The Critical Density of the Universe
- The universe can be flat and matter dominated,
with a matter density that is a third of the old
critical density!
99Best Fit Values for Cardassian Parameters
100Structure Formation in the Cardassian Model
- Prior to zeq 1 the Cardassian term is
unimportant and therefore does not appreciably
affect early structure formation. - Because the term causes acceleration once it
does dominate, perturbation growth is frozen out.
- Without a specific, motivating model for the
Cardassian term, we cannot yet completely predict
its effect on structure formation.